


Login / Signup
Cart
Your cart is empty
This is a screen for advanced hackers who like the look of a long rectangular TFT screen with tons of pixels. The 3.2" display has 320x820 18-bit full-colour pixels and is an IPS display, so the colour looks great up to 80 degrees off-axis in any direction.
The TFT driver is ST7701S and uses both SPI and TTL RGB 'dot clock' data. The SPI is only for configuring the display - you cannot draw pixels over SPI! Also, despite having a 40-pin connector, it does not have the same pinout as standard 'rectangular' 800x480 (4.3", 5" or 7") or 480x272 (4.3") displays. It's a new kind of beast for sure.
To make stuff light up you'll need a chip that can perform TTL RGB TFT driving, which means a powerful microcontroller such as the ESP32-S3 with octal PSRAM or a computer like a Raspberry Pi (with either direct-DPI connection or an intermediary chip like the ICN6211). Either way, it's not something you can wire up to your Feather or Arduino!
It also has a lovely bezel with a capacitive touch display (FT6336U) with a connection for I2C and IRQ on the 40-pin FPC.
This is just the display module! No driver PCB is included.
You cannot use these with an everyday microcontroller unless it specifically has support for RGB-666 displays so please do not purchase unless you know for sure that it can plug into a driver board with the correct pinout as well.